Sixty-seven percent of New York City voters said they agree
with the protesters’ views, while 23 percent don’t, the school’s
Polling Institute said today. Support ranged from 81 percent
among registered Democrats to 58 percent among independents and
35 percent from Republicans. By 72 percent to 24 percent, voters
said law-abiding demonstrators can stay as long as they want.

The protests that began on Sept. 17 have inspired thousands
to take to the streets in 100 U.S. cities and on four continents
worldwide, according to organizers. Participants say they
represent “the 99 percent,” a reference to Nobel Prize-winning
economist Joseph Stiglitz’s study showing the richest 1 percent
of Americans control 40 percent of U.S. wealth.

“Critics complain that no one can figure out what the
protesters are protesting,” said Maurice Carroll, director of
the Hamden, Connecticut-based institute. “But seven out of 10
New Yorkers say they understand and most agree with the anti-
Wall Street views of the protesters.”

Quinnipiac surveyed 1,068 registered voters by telephone
Oct. 12-16. The results had a margin of error of plus or minus 3
percentage points.

Protecting Speech

Mayor Michael Bloomberg has said he supports the
protesters’ free-speech rights as long as they don’t violate the
law. He said he’ll defer to the owner of Zuccotti Park,
Brookfield Office Properties Inc., to determine how long the
demonstrators can stay. Brookfield’s park rules forbid camping,
lying on benches, and using tarps and tents.

A confrontation between demonstrators and New York City
police was avoided last week after Brookfield postponed a
cleanup of the park, at the intersection of Broadway and Liberty
Street near the site of the World Trade Center.

“I’m 100 percent in favor of protecting -- 1,000 percent
in favor -- of giving people rights to say things, but also we
have to protect those who don’t want to say anything,”
Bloomberg said today at a press briefing in Queens.

“There are places where I think it’s appropriate to
express yourself and then there are other places that are
appropriate to set up a tent city, and they don’t necessarily
have to be one and the same,” he said. “The Constitution
doesn’t protect tents, it protects speech and assembly.”

Millionaire Tax

In a separate poll, almost three-quarters of New York state
voters said they favor higher taxes on residents with at least
$1 million in annual income, according to a Siena College
Research Institute survey released today. A higher levy was
backed by 83 percent of Democrats and 55 percent of Republicans.

An existing tax adds a temporary surcharge on New York’s
married couples earning more than $300,000, and singles earning
more than $200,000. It’s set to expire Dec. 31. Governor Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat, and Senate Republicans, who hold a majority,
made clear they wouldn’t renew it.

The telephone survey of 800 registered voters by
Loudonville, New York-based Siena, conducted Oct. 10-12, had a
margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.